After a torrent of media reports on the walkouts and boos at the April 2 Detroit debut to the Charlie Sheen LIVE: My Violent Torpedo of Truth tour, Sheen seems to have retooled his show judging by a handful of reports from the second date, Sunday night in Chicago.

"Was Saturday night some crazy bad dream? Because the Charlie Sheen show I saw at the Chicago Theater on Sunday night bore absolutely no resemblance to whatever it was the Detroit crowd and I think we witnessed on Saturday,' CNN entertainment editor Rachel Wells wrote on cnn.com. "The entire nonsensical, rambling, random multi-media production? Scrapped. In its place: a live 90-minute talk show, with Charlie as the guest."

"The gig, to a packed 5,000-strong audience, started well with a spoof involving news clips of the actor’s recent outbursts, and high-action excerpts from classic movies including Apocalypse Now, starring his father, Martin.

"Sheen’s two nubile "goddesses," with whom he lives, also won applause for kissing each other passionately.

"But the boos began during a stream-of-consciousness monologue by Sheen at a presidential podium - the kind of verbal fireworks he has displayed online, but which patently failed to grip Saturday’s audience."

But Sunday night, Sheen seems to have settled down, in as much as he can, judging by the now months of public stunts and statements leading up to and after his firing from the hit CBS sitcom Two and a Half Men.

Sitting on stage with an interviewer, Sheen talked about his career before and after the CBS firing, about celebrity and even about Detroit.

When fans shouted, "Detroit sucks!" Sheen, as shown below in this fan video from YouTube, replied, "No, they don't."

The tour continues April 5 in Cleveland and hits New York City on April 8 and Toronto on April 14 and 15.